KEY POINTS
  • Microsoft expects the Nuance deal to expand its market opportunity in health care.
  • Nuance's CEO will report to Microsoft cloud chief Scott Guthrie, who says both companies want to target software developers, not health-care providers themselves.

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Scott Guthrie, Microsoft's executive vice president of cloud and artificial intelligence, speaks at Microsoft's Build developer conference in Seattle in May 2019.

Thanks to its pending acquisition of Nuance Communications, Microsoft will soon have a suite of software tools that doctors use to automatically keep notes on meetings with patients. But Microsoft isn't interested in automating everything doctors do, said Scott Guthrie, the software company's executive vice president for cloud and artificial intelligence.

The pending acquisition, worth $19.7 billion including debt, is an unusual case of a major technology company drawing from its cash pile to gain relationships in an individual industry. Microsoft's rivals in the growing cloud computing market have not gone so far. If the move proves successful, Microsoft could convert Nuance customers into big users of Microsoft's Azure cloud and strengthen its position relative to the market leader, Amazon.

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